Ch. 5 Vocab Flashcards

(22 cards)

1
Q

creating and testing models that may suggest cause-and-effect relationships among behaviors

A

causal modeling

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2
Q

in a correlational study, an estimate of the amount of variability in scores on one variable that can be explained by the other variable

A

coefficient of determination (r squared)

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3
Q

the degree of relationship between two traits, behaviors, or events, represented by “r”

A

correlation

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4
Q

a study designed to determine the correlation between two traits, behaviors, or events

A

correlational study

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5
Q

a method in which the same set of behaviors or characteristics are measured at two separate points in time (often years apart); six different correlations are computed, and the pattern of correlations is used to infer the causal direction

A

cross-lagged panel design

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6
Q

a method in which different groups of subjects who are at different stages are measured at a single point in time; a method that looks for time-related causes

A

cross-sectional study

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7
Q

study in which a researcher systematically examines the effects of pre-existing subject characteristics (often called subject variables) by forming groups based on these naturally occurring differences between subjects

A

ex post facto study

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8
Q

a correlation-based method for estimating a snore on one measured behavior from a score on the other when two behaviors are strongly related

A

linear regression analysis

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9
Q

a method in which the same group of subjects is followed and measured at different points in time; a method that looks for changes across time

A

longitudinal design

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10
Q

statistical intercorrelations among three or more behaviors, represented by “R”

A

multiple correlation

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11
Q

a correlation-based technique (from multiple correlation) that uses a regression equation to predict the score on one behavior from scores on the other related behaviors

A

multiple regression analysis

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12
Q

the relationship existing between two variables such that an increase in one is associated with a decrease in the other; also called and inverse relationship

A

negative correlation

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13
Q

a design in which the researcher compares the effects of different treatment conditions on pre-existing groups of participants

A

nonequivalent groups design

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14
Q

an analysis that allows the statistical influence of one measured variable to be help constant while computing the correlation between the other two measured variables

A

partial correlation

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15
Q

an important correlation-based method in which subjects are measured on several related behaviors; the researcher creates (and tests) models of possible causal sequences using sophisticated correlational techniques

A

path analysis

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16
Q

the relationship between two measures such that an increase in the value of one is associated with an increase in the value of the other; also called a direct relationship

A

positive correlation

17
Q

a research design used to assess whether the occurrence of an event alters behavior; scores from measurements made before and after the event are compared

A

pretest/posttest design

18
Q

often seem like real experiments, but they lack one or more of its essential elements, such as manipulation of antecedents and random assignment to treatment conditions

A

quasi-experimental designs

19
Q

the line of best fit; represents the equation that best describes the mathematical relationship between two variables measured in a correlational study

A

regression line

20
Q

a graph of data from a correlational study, created by plotting pairs of scores from each subject; the value of one variable is plotted on the X (horizontal) axis and the other variable on the Y (vertical) axis

21
Q

relationships between pairs of scores from each subject

A

simple correlations

22
Q

the characteristics of the subjects in an experiment or quasi-experiment that cannot be manipulated by the researcher; sometimes used to select subjects into groups

A

subject variable